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Journalists in Azerbaijan face trials, jailings, travel bans

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Michael_Novakhov
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from Voice of America.

An Azerbaijani court on Friday denied petitions by two jailed journalists to be released from house arrest, their lawyers said.

The journalists, Aynur Elgunesh and Natig Javadli, work for Meydan TV, an independent outlet based in Germany. They were among six journalists arrested in the Azerbaijani capital, Baku, in early December.

Azerbaijan is among the worst jailers of journalists in the world, with more than a dozen behind bars, according to a report released this week by the Committee to Protect Journalists, or CPJ.

Azerbaijan is currently detaining at least 18 journalists for their work, according to CPJ.

The group’s latest prison census, which acts as a snapshot of media workers in custody as of Dec. 1, listed 13 journalists in the Azerbaijani prison. One of those was released after the census was taken, but authorities then jailed six more journalists, including Elgunesh and Javadli.

The arrests are a concern for local activists and reporters.

“Independent and critical media in Azerbaijan is going through its most difficult period,” Azerbaijani activist Samir Kazimli told VOA. “If this policy of repression does not stop, if it continues, independent media in Azerbaijan may completely collapse.”

The annual CPJ report found 361 journalists behind bars around the world. Azerbaijan ranked eighth worst in the census, behind countries such as China, Israel, Myanmar, Belarus and Russia.

“Azerbaijan has been cracking down on independent media for well over a decade,” CPJ’s CEO, Jodie Ginsberg, told VOA. “It doesn’t often get the attention that it deserves.”

Local journalists like Shamshad Agha are worried that Azerbaijani authorities are trying to stamp out independent media.

Agha is editor of Argument.az, a news website covering democracy, corruption and human rights.

“The lives of all independent journalists are in danger,” he told VOA. Agha said he has been banned from leaving the country since July 2024.

Azerbaijan’s Washington embassy did not immediately reply to VOA’s email requesting comment.

Many of the journalists jailed in Azerbaijan are accused of foreign currency smuggling, which media watchdogs have rejected as a sham charge.

Many of those currently detained work for the independent outlets Abzas Media and Meydan TV.

Farid Mehralizada, an economist and journalist with the Azerbaijani Service of VOA’s sister outlet, Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, is among those currently imprisoned.

Jailed since May, Mehralizada is facing charges of conspiring to smuggle foreign currency, as well as “illegal entrepreneurship, money laundering, tax evasion and document forgery.” He denies the charges, which carry a combined sentence of up to 12 years behind bars.

On Thursday, Ulviyya Guliyeva, a journalist who has been a contributor to VOA’s Azerbaijani Service since 2019, was summoned to a police station in Baku for questioning.

The journalist said she was questioned about Meydan TV, even though she is not an employee there. Guliyeva said she was also placed under a travel ban that blocked her from leaving the country.

“This is a very disturbing situation for me,” Guliyeva said. “I see this as pressure on my journalistic activities.”

Parvana Bayramova of VOA’s Azerbaijani Service contributed to this report.


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Audio Posts: Selected Articles

Journalists in Azerbaijan face trials, jailings, travel bans

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Michael_Novakhov
shared this story
.

WASHINGTON – An Azerbaijani court on Friday denied petitions by two jailed journalists to be released from house arrest, their lawyers said.

The journalists, Aynur Elgunesh and Natig Javadli, work for Meydan TV, an independent outlet based in Germany. They were among six journalists arrested in the Azerbaijani capital, Baku, in early December.

Azerbaijan is among the worst jailers of journalists in the world, with more than a dozen behind bars, according to a report released this week by the Committee to Protect Journalists, or CPJ.

Azerbaijan is currently detaining at least 18 journalists for their work, according to CPJ.

The group’s latest prison census, which acts as a snapshot of media workers in custody as of Dec. 1, listed 13 journalists in the Azerbaijani prison. One of those was released after the census was taken, but authorities then jailed six more journalists, including Elgunesh and Javadli.

The arrests are a concern for local activists and reporters.

“Independent and critical media in Azerbaijan is going through its most difficult period,” Azerbaijani activist Samir Kazimli told VOA. “If this policy of repression does not stop, if it continues, independent media in Azerbaijan may completely collapse.”

The annual CPJ report found 361 journalists behind bars around the world. Azerbaijan ranked eighth worst in the census, behind countries such as China, Israel, Myanmar, Belarus and Russia.

FILE - A soldier of the Israeli army stands next to a military vehicle in a street near the building where the Al Jazeera office was stormed and closed, in Ramallah, in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, Sept. 22, 2024. FILE - A soldier of the Israeli army stands next to a military vehicle in a street near the building where the Al Jazeera office was stormed and closed, in Ramallah, in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, Sept. 22, 2024.

Report: China, Israel named leading jailers of journalists

“Azerbaijan has been cracking down on independent media for well over a decade,” CPJ’s CEO, Jodie Ginsberg, told VOA. “It doesn’t often get the attention that it deserves.”

Local journalists like Shamshad Agha are worried that Azerbaijani authorities are trying to stamp out independent media.

Agha is editor of Argument.az, a news website covering democracy, corruption and human rights.

“The lives of all independent journalists are in danger,” he told VOA. Agha said he has been banned from leaving the country since July 2024.

Azerbaijan’s Washington embassy did not immediately reply to VOA’s email requesting comment.

Many of the journalists jailed in Azerbaijan are accused of foreign currency smuggling, which media watchdogs have rejected as a sham charge.

Many of those currently detained work for the independent outlets Abzas Media and Meydan TV.

Farid Mehralizada, an economist and journalist with the Azerbaijani Service of VOA’s sister outlet, Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, is among those currently imprisoned.

Farid Mehralizada, an economist and journalist with VOA's sister outlet Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, has been jailed in Azerbaijan since May. (Parvana Bayramova/VOA) Farid Mehralizada, an economist and journalist with VOA's sister outlet Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, has been jailed in Azerbaijan since May. (Parvana Bayramova/VOA)

Azerbaijani journalist says he was jailed over his work

Jailed since May, Mehralizada is facing charges of conspiring to smuggle foreign currency, as well as “illegal entrepreneurship, money laundering, tax evasion and document forgery.” He denies the charges, which carry a combined sentence of up to 12 years behind bars.

On Thursday, Ulviyya Guliyeva, a journalist who has been a contributor to VOA’s Azerbaijani Service since 2019, was summoned to a police station in Baku for questioning.

The journalist said she was questioned about Meydan TV, even though she is not an employee there. Guliyeva said she was also placed under a travel ban that blocked her from leaving the country.

“This is a very disturbing situation for me,” Guliyeva said. “I see this as pressure on my journalistic activities.”

Parvana Bayramova of VOA’s Azerbaijani Service contributed to this report.


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Business Rundown: The “Creator Economy” Braces For A TikTok Ban

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The TikTok ban has been upheld by the Supreme Court. If the Chinese-owned social media platform is not sold to a U.S. owner by Sunday, January 19th, millions of consumers and content creators on the app will need to pack up and find a new platform to post their videos. The “creator economy” is a multi-billion dollar industry in America now, so how will TikTok creators be impacted? Lydia Hu speaks with AirBnb entrepreneur with millions of likes and hundreds of thousands of followers on TikTok, Brittany Magsig about how the possible ban puts her livelihood in jeopardy. Later, Lydia speaks with Anjana Susarla is an Omura-Saxena Professor of Responsible AI at Michigan State University business school professor Anajana Susarla about where creators may go after TikTok. Photo Credit: AP
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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AP Headline News – Jan 17 2025 18:00 (EST)

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6 PM ET: TikTok’s final days, DOGE-proofing federal jobs, new bug gets galactic name & more

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The families of hostages held in Gaza are on edge as Israel’s cabinet considers the ceasefire and hostage exchange deal. We’ll talk about what to expect for the end of TikTok in the US. Some federal workers are taking steps to protect their roles from the scrutiny of President-elect Donald Trump’s Department of Government Efficiency. We’ll tell you who Ohio’s Republican governor has tapped to fill the US Senate seat vacated by Vice President-elect JD Vance. Plus, a newly discovered isopod has been named after a “Star Wars” character. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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Trump’s swearing-in will move inside the Capitol Rotunda because of intense cold weather

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AP Washington correspondent Sagar Meghani reports a frigid winter forecast has led to a big change for Monday’s inauguration plans.

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Ukraine battles on ahead of Trump’s inauguration

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During Donald Trump’s election campaign, he claimed he could end the war in Ukraine in a single day. As his inauguration nears, the goal widens. Amid growing speculation that negotiations will happen, our Senior International Correspondent, Orla Guerin, reports on a dark mood in Ukraine. Also in the programme: US Tik Tok ban is upheld; and an amazing bathhouse in Pompeii revealed. (Picture: Aftermath of a Russian missile strike in Kryvyi Rih. Credit: Press service of the State Emergency Service of Ukraine)

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U.S. Indexes Log Their Best Week Since Just After the Presidential Election

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Plus: Novo Nordisk shares fell after the U.S. government said the diabetes and weight-loss drugs Ozempic and Wegovy would face a second round of Medicare price negotiations. Goldman Sachs hits a record high after reporting a surge in quarterly profit earlier this week. And crypto-related stocks rose as bitcoin prices rose back above $104,000. Danny Lewis reports. Sign up for the WSJ’s free What’s News newsletter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Florida jury says CNN defamed Navy veteran in story about endangered Afghans

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AP correspondent Haya Panjwani reports on a CNN defamation case.

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A Brief Reflection on the War in Gaza as the Biden Administration Ends

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The American people have every right to hold public officials accountable for their records. That includes me, which is why I have sought to be available to journalists and to participate in public events since leaving my position as Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Israeli-Palestinian Affairs in the Bureau of Near Eastern Affairs at the U.S. Department of State last June. Subjecting the policies of the Biden administration to evaluation and criticism, just like any other administration, is not only fair but healthy. I, myself, have offered critiques of specific choices and policies, most recently on 60 Minutes (full transcript). Public engagement and dialogue are the lifeblood of democracy.

However, vitriol directed at individual Biden administration officials is gratuitous and, in some cases, even dangerous to their safety. Policy disagreements aside, caricatures of Secretary of State Antony Blinken and National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan I have seen in the press or on social media are wholly inconsistent with the people I know. The same is true of Ambassador Linda Thomas-Greenfield, for whom I worked at the U.S. Mission to the United Nations before taking on the Israeli-Palestinian portfolio, and many others I know. Debate and critique on policy choices should not be confused with unfounded attacks on character. Any accusation of indifference or wanton disregard on their part to the welfare of Palestinians is patently false. 

I also have seen government colleagues who are perceived to be advocates for Palestinian rights accused of support for terrorism. These charges are equally false, if not also defamatory. I saw firsthand how the deaths and suffering of all victims, Palestinian and Israeli, weighed heavily on almost all administration officials. I do not think I am alone in saying my heart aches for all victims of the conflict and this feeling will not pass. Nor should it.

It is certainly valid to argue that more or different approaches should have been tried, as I have done, but I still believe that intentions matter. So, too, does intellectual honesty. I assessed that creating more daylight with the Netanyahu government could have delivered an earlier ceasefire, influencing the calculus within the Israeli coalition and strengthening our position to demand that our Arab partners impose more pressure on Hamas. But I also assess that there is a possibility I could be wrong. Secretary Blinken demonstrated appropriate introspection at his final press availability, saying, “Disappointments – yeah, of course, there are always many.  There’s always the things that you didn’t get done.  There’s always the could’ve, would’ve, should’ve that you ask yourself.” 

I recognize that the fact that decision making is often more complex than can be perceived from outside of government will be of no solace to the families who have lost loved ones. Unfortunately, the tragedies of the past 15 months cannot be undone. Nevertheless, if the objective is to do better in the future, we will fail unless our arguments – whether defenses or criticisms – accurately account both for what happened and why. I believe that both supporters and opponents of U.S. policy on the Israel-Hamas conflict should agree on this goal. 

We can and must do better in the future, whether it is the Israeli-Palestinian conflict or another foreign policy crisis. While there is no guarantee we will in fact do better, I hope that at the very least we are caught trying. We owe that not only to the American people but also to all those affected by our decisions. I believe the best hope for such meaningful exchanges of ideas is if the problems I have identified with the current discourse are rectified. With the pressing need to ensure full implementation of the ceasefire deal in Gaza, there is no time to waste.    

IMAGE: U.S. President Joe Biden (R) delivers remarks on the recently announced cease-fire deal between Israel and Hamas while joined by Vice President Kamala Harris (L) and Secretary of State Antony Blinken (C) in the Cross Hall of the White House on January 15, 2025 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)

The post A Brief Reflection on the War in Gaza as the Biden Administration Ends appeared first on Just Security.


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